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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Samuel Ball Platner, Thomas Ashby, A Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome. Search the whole document.

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i. 18. 2), dirty and wet (ib. v. 22. 5-9), a resort of harlots (Pers. 5. 32; Mart. ii. 17; vi. 66. 1-2; xi. 61. 3; 78. ii ; Priap. 40. I), of dealers in provisions and delicacies (Iuv. xi. 141; Mart. vii. 31; x. 94. 5-6) and finery (Mart. ix. 37), and of tradesmen of various sorts (praeco, CIL vi. 1953; crepidarius, ib. 9284; ferrarius, 9399; lanarius, 9491; inpilarius, 33862; lintearius, 9526). That there were also dwellings of more distinguished persons is shown by the fact that Caesar once lived here (Suet. Caes. 46) and L. Arruntius Stella, consul in 101 A.D. (Mart. xii. 3. 9; cf. xii. 21. 5). Of a probable late division into Subura maior and Subura minor, to be inferred from the reading of one inscription (CIL vi. 9526: Sebura maiore ad ninfas), nothing further is known. See also Jord. i. I. 185-186; HJ 330-332. For rulers and scribes of the Jewish synagogue of the Subura (a)/rxwn; grammateu\s *sibouphsi/wn), see CIG 6447; Mitt. 1886, 56; NS 1920, 147-151, 154; BC 1922, 208-212.